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CRIME

State told to pay collector €8k for binning Nazi flag

A collector of war memorabilia from Normandy, northern France, has been awarded €8,000 in compensation after a French court ruled that authorities had "illegally" ordered the destruction of a Nazi flag from his prized collection of World World II memorabilia.

State told to pay collector €8k for binning Nazi flag
The man said he started his collection with his grandfather’s bayonet that he had used while serving in the French army. File photo: Valerie Everett/Flickr

French authorities have been forced to pay out €8,000 in compensation to a collector of World War II memorabilia after it confiscated and destroyed a Nazi flag that was part of his collection, Le Point reported on Tuesday.

The case can be traced back to October 5th 2009, according to Le Point, when the collector's partner pressed charges against him after he allegedly threatened their child with a handgun.

Following the complaint the 53-year-old father was then taken into custody by police.

During the investigation, police carried out a raid of the man’s home in which they seized a Nazi flag designed to be displayed on a balcony which had been folded up in a cardboard box.

Along with the flag, police found five daggers, seven German, English and American bayonets, a flare pistol, as well as a German medal and helmet.

“I started my collection with my grandfather’s bayonet that he had used while serving in the French army," the man told Le Point.

“Then I expanded [my collection] with objects from the allied forces and the Germans. The German objects are worth a lot more.”

But when the case against him was dismissed in 2010, the collector naturally asked for his memorabilia to be returned to him, he was stunned when the prosecutor refused, saying they had ordered the destruction of the flag as well as the weapons.

The prosecutor justified the destruction of the weapons, because of their “dangerous nature”, and said that the Nazi flag bearing a swastika flag “recalls a racist and xenophobic ideology.”

Angered by the prosecutor’s decision, the collector then appealed to a civil court in Caen and finally won the case.

While the destruction of the weapons was justifiable by law Le Point notes, owning a Nazi flag is not actually illegal as long as it is not displayed in public, so should therefore have been returned. 

The court in Caen this week admitted there had been a “serious offence” and ordered €8,000 ($11,000) in damages to be paid to the collector, below the €13,725 ($18,900) in compensation he had demanded, based on the current market price of the items.

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CRIME

Two girls wounded in knife attack outside French school

An assailant on Thursday wounded two girls aged 6 and 11 in a knife attack close to their school in the east of France and was later arrested, officials said.

Two girls wounded in knife attack outside French school

The 11-year-old was stabbed outside the school in the town of Souffelweyersheim, on the outskirts of Strasbourg, while the six-year-old was attacked by the same man nearby.

Both received superficial wounds, police said, adding the attacker did not appear to have any known links to radicals and was not previously known to the security services.

Both received superficial wounds, police said, adding the attacker did not appear to have any known links to radicals and was not previously known to the security services.

Both girls are being treated in a paediatric hospital. Parents were later in the afternoon allowed to pick up their children, who had been confined to the school in the immediate aftermath of the attack.

The attacker, born in 1995, was arrested in the area where he attacked the second girl, the police said. He no longer had the knife in his hand and did not resist arrest, it added.

The attack came as Prime Minister Gabriel Attal announced a series of measures aimed at cracking down on violence committed by schoolchildren against their peers. There was no indication so far that the attacker had a link with the school.

“I’m really scared. We’ve been reassured that the children are safe inside, but we don’t know when we’ll be able to get them back,” Sarah, a mother of an eight-year-old pupil, told AFP before the green light was given to collect the children.

“A friend called me. She saw the commotion in front of the school as she passed by. Her reflex was to call me so that I could pick up my son.”

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